30 Love-Filled Photos Every Parent Must Take with their Newborn!

Photography is all about capturing love. While most parents cannot stop taking photos of their precious babies, they often forget to get themselves involved by capturing the true love that flows in the family through natural interaction. Baby portraits can certainly tell your children how cute they looked when they were born, but family portraits will tell them how much they are loved. Those moments of love are the most precious memories you want to keep forever. Join us as we share some of our favorite love-filled newborn family photos below, we hope you find them as magical as we did!

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You’re rocking, swaying and shushing away. And nothing. Nada. Nope, your baby just isn’t having it. You’ve been there yourself — C-R-A-N-K-Y! While you can knock back a glass of pinot and suddenly your day seems much brighter, your newborn can hardly do the same. No mom should ever expect her baby to be 100 percent fuss-free; even the absolutely, positively very best babies have their diva moments. When your newborn goes from cute to crank, check out these totally simple ways to soothe your fussy baby.

1. Do a holder switch-a-roo. It’s been 45 minutes of cradling your cranky kiddo. You’re swaying, bopping and ducking, weaving back and forth and acting like a human rocking chair. But, she’s still crying. The more she cries, the more frustrated you get.

Photo: Getty Images We all know that sleep is important. But a new study from the US suggests that sleep – or rather bedtime – is even more significant than we thought.
Researchers from the Ohio State University found that children aged three to five who consistently went to bed before 8pm were less likely to be obese as teenagers. Conversely, they found that delaying a child's bedtime until 9pm or later doubles their chance of becoming obese.

Dr Sarah Anderson said that the study reinforces the importance of a good bedtime routine.
"It's something concrete that families can do to lower their child's risk and it's also likely to have positive benefits on behaviour and on social, emotional and cognitive development," she said.

Researchers working on the study used data from 977 children in the Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, which followed babies born in 10 different US cities in 1991.
Researchers divided bedtimes into three categori…